System and method for managing and/or rendering internet multimedia content in a network

ABSTRACT

A system and a method render internet multimedia content in a network using an application to render the internet multimedia content and/or locally stored multimedia content on one or more rendering devices in the network. The application may provide web browser functions, such as, for example, receiving, processing, decoding and/or rendering the internet multimedia content. The application may have an enhanced user interface which may enable a user to select the internet multimedia content and a rendering device in the network, send the internet multimedia content to the rendering device and/or control rendering of the internet multimedia content on the rendering device.

This application is a continuation application of and claims the benefit of U.S. application Ser. No. 12/459,090 filed Jun. 26, 2009.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

The present invention generally relates to a system and a method for managing and/or rendering internet multimedia content in a network. More specifically, the present invention relates to a system and a method that utilize an application to render the internet multimedia content and locally stored multimedia content on one or more rendering devices in the network. The application may provide web browser functions, such as, for example, requesting, receiving, processing, decoding and/or rendering the internet multimedia content.

It is well known to use the internet to browse, find, retrieve and consume internet content using a web browser. Typically, the internet content may be a combination of webpage formatting, such as, for example, HTML, xHTML; text; graphics; active content and/or applications, such as, for example, Flash (trademark of Adobe System, Inc.) and/or JavaScript (trademark of Sun Microsystems, Inc.); and/or multimedia content. The multimedia content may be audio content, video content, image content and/or the like. The audio content may be audio files, audio podcasts, audio streams, internet radio channels, ringtones, midi files and/or the like. The video content may be video files, video podcasts, video streams, video channels and/or the like. The image content may be digital photographs, bitmap images, vector graphics images and/or the like.

Typically, the web browser may be an application provided by a computing device, such as, for example, a desktop computer, a laptop computer and/or a mobile device, such as a PDA and/or a mobile telephone. The web browser may access content sources using the internet as generally illustrated in FIG. 1. The internet content may be retrieved from the content sources using delivery protocols, such as, for example, Hypertext Transfer Protocol (“HTTP”) and/or Real Time Streaming Protocol (“RTSP”). The web browser may accept input from the user to search for and/or select content of interest to the user. The web browser may retrieve the content of interest and may present the content of interest to the user for consumption. Presentation of the content of interest may require one or more associated helper applications, such as, for example, a multimedia player and/or a scripting engine.

Typically, the user may use the web browser to find and/or access a webpage of the internet content. The webpage of the internet content may be found using a search engine; by selecting a “bookmark” previously created by the user; by typing a content location identifier, such as, for example, a Uniform Resource Locator (“URL”); and/or by using other means. The webpage of the internet content may have and/or may provide multimedia content which may be decoded and/or may be rendered for the user. The video content may be displayed in an embedded video player which may render the video content in the webpage with associated webpage content and/or the formatting. Alternatively, the video content may be displayed in a separate video player which may appear on a separate webpage or in a separate window dedicated to the video player. Similarly, the image content may be displayed as embedded in the webpage or may be shown in a separate image viewer window. The audio content may be played by speakers and/or sent to an “audio out” port on the computing device.

FIG. 2 shows a typical prior art system in which the user interacts with the web browser using a web browser user interface (“UI”) to find, retrieve and/or consume the internet content. The web browser UI may accept input from the user to navigate web pages and to discover and retrieve the internet content. The web browser UI may display and/or may render the internet content for the user. The web browser may use one or more multimedia players to process and render the multimedia content. The multimedia player may access the multimedia content using the web browser, as shown in FIG. 2, or the multimedia player may access the multimedia content using the internet without the multimedia content passing through the web browser.

Thus, the web browser may provide an interactive experience in which the user may find, retrieve and/or consume internet content, such as multimedia content. The web browser is currently the only means by which a user may access the complete collection of multimedia content available on the internet. However, the web browser is limited to rendering the internet content on the computing device which hosts the web browser.

The emergence of multimedia home networking technologies allows users to enjoy digital multimedia content on a variety of networked rendering devices in the home. The Universal Plug and Play (UPnP) Audio and Video (AV) standard defines a popular protocol by which media servers and media rendering devices may be connected, controlled and used to process and play multimedia content. The Digital Living Network Alliance (DLNA) specification provides additional details and conformance points to ensure UPnP AV-based home networking products correctly communicate with each other. Products based on the UPnP AV standard and/or the DLNA specification allow the user to access, control and render digital multimedia content files, such as, for example, audio files, video files, digital photographs and the like, within a multimedia-enabled home network.

Typically, the digital multimedia content files reside on one or more media servers in the home network. The digital multimedia content files may have been downloaded from the internet. For example, the user may have accessed an internet content store using the web browser to purchase and/or download the digital multimedia content files to one of the media servers in the home network. Alternatively, the digital multimedia content files may have been acquired without using the internet. For example, the user may have copied audio files from a CD or transferred video files from a camcorder and stored resulting audio and/or video files on one of the media servers in the home network. After the digital multimedia content files are stored on one of the media servers in the home network, user input may direct transmittal of the digital multimedia content files to one or more of the media rendering devices in the home network.

The home network may have various media rendering devices, such as, for example, networked stereos, televisions, personal computers, digital photo frames and other devices which have multimedia content rendering capabilities. The home network may also have control points which may be used to control the servers and the rendering devices so that the user may discover and/or may select from the digital multimedia content files and/or may control a rendering experience.

Thus, existing multimedia home networking technologies may enable selection, delivery and/or rendering of the digital multimedia content files which reside on the media servers in the home network. However, the digital multimedia content files must be downloaded and/or purchased by the user and must be placed on one of the media servers to be accessible to the rendering devices in the home network. Much of the multimedia content available on the internet was created for delivery to and/or display in a web browser and is typically not available in a downloadable form. Thus, the existing multimedia home networking technologies do not allow the user to access the complete collection of multimedia content available on the internet which has been created for delivery to and display within a web browser.

The user may have a media management and control application which enables the user to find, obtain, organize and play multimedia content. Typically, the media management and control application is provided by a personal computer or a laptop computer. For example, Twonky Media Manager (trademark of PacketVideo Corp.), SimpleCenter (trademark of Universal Electronics, Inc.) and iTunes (trademark of Apple Computer, Inc.) are media management and control applications provided by mobile devices. However, limited versions of a media management and control application may be provided by mobile devices, such as PDAs or mobile telephones.

The media management and control application may access an online content store to enable the user of the application to find, purchase and/or download multimedia content from the online content store. Thus, the application may allow the user to build a collection of multimedia content which may be played within the application, may be transferred to a mobile device and/or may be sent to one or more of the rendering devices in the home network. The application may act as a media server to transfer the multimedia content to the media rendering devices in the home network at the request of the user.

The media management and control application may have access to specific digital multimedia content files and/or multimedia content streams available from the internet. For example, the application may have the ability to relay internet radio channels. The user may select one of the internet radio channels. Then, the application may stream the selected internet radio channel from the internet to one or more of the rendering devices in the home network without storing the multimedia content on the media servers in the home network. The media management and control application may act as a media server and may reformat the content for compatibility with the target rendering device.

Therefore, media management and control applications may provide functions to obtain, purchase and/or organize multimedia content. The applications may also provide access to a limited subset of the multimedia content available on the internet. However, the applications do not have web browser functionality, and do not provide access to the complete collection of multimedia content available on the internet which has been created for delivery to and/or display within web browsers. Existing media management and control applications do not enable rendering of the complete collection of multimedia content available on the internet by the rendering devices in a home network.

An emerging class of consumer electronics device products known as bridge devices connect to the home network and to the rendering devices in the home to allow direct display of streamed internet multimedia content on one or more of the rendering devices. Typically, bridge devices do not access the rendering device using the home network. Instead, bridge devices have a wired audio and/or video connection which attaches directly to the rendering device. Thus, a bridge device is coupled directly to a single rendering device, and the rendering device does not need to be capable of connecting to the home network.

The bridge devices do not provide web browser functionality and, therefore, are not capable of providing access to the complete collection of multimedia content available on the internet. The bridge devices are designed to accommodate a specific subset of internet multimedia content, often from one or a few content sites. Restriction of the use of the bridge device to a few content sites enables the bridge device to be inexpensive and to have a relatively simple user interface. An example of a bridge device is a “Netflix Ready” device (trademark of Netflix, Inc.), such as the “Roku Digital Video Player” that allows the user to access Netflix “instant watch” videos from the internet and display them on a television. The “Netflix Ready” device must have an internet connection, and the user must have a valid Netflix subscription. However, the “Netflix Ready” device cannot browse internet multimedia content other than the Netflix “instant watch” videos. The “Netflix Ready” device also must be connected to the television using wired audio and video cables, and the “Netflix Ready” device cannot connect wirelessly to the television and cannot connect to a DLNA television using the home network.

Another example of bridge devices are some cable set-top boxes and digital video recorders (DVRs) that provide access to “YouTube” internet content (trademark of Google Inc.). For example, TiVo's HD DVR is an example of a bridge device which supports “YouTube” internet content. These bridge devices allow a subset of YouTube's internet video content to be viewed directly on a television using wired audio and video cables. The set-top box or DVR must have an internet connection, and a monthly subscription fee may be required. However, these bridge devices cannot browse general internet multimedia content and, thus cannot provide access to all of the multimedia content available on the internet.

Existing web browsers are limited to rendering the internet multimedia content on the computing device which hosts the web browser. Existing multimedia home networking technologies and bridge devices enable rendering of multimedia content on rendering devices in the home network but do not allow the user to access the complete collection of multimedia content available on the internet. Therefore, existing multimedia technology does not enable consumption of the complete collection of multimedia content available on the internet on rendering devices in the home network.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

The present invention generally relates to a system and a method for managing and/or rendering internet multimedia content in a network. More specifically, the present invention relates to a system and a method that utilize an application to render the internet multimedia content and/or locally stored multimedia content on one or more rendering devices in the network. The application may provide web browser functions, such as, for example, requesting, receiving, processing, decoding and/or rendering the internet multimedia content. The application may have an enhanced user interface which may enable a user to select the internet multimedia content and a rendering device in the home network, send the internet multimedia content to the rendering device and/or control rendering of the internet multimedia content on the rendering device.

To this end, in an embodiment of the present invention, a method for rendering internet multimedia content in a network connected to the internet is provided. A rendering device is connected to the network. The method has the steps of retrieving the internet multimedia content from the internet using the network wherein the internet multimedia content is retrieved from the internet based on user input accepted by a user interface provided by a device connected to the network and further wherein the user interface displays a webpage; transmitting the internet multimedia content to the rendering device; and rendering the internet multimedia content on the rendering device wherein rendering by the rendering device is controlled by the device that provides the user interface.

In an embodiment of the invention, a computer-readable medium having program instructions is provided. The program instructions have a web browser application wherein a first device and a plurality of UPnP AV rendering devices are connected to a network. Execution of the program instructions by the first device enables the first device to perform the steps of: retrieving a web page from a web server via the internet at the direction of a user of the first device; displaying the web page in a user interface of the first device; and detecting one of the plurality of UPnP AV rendering devices wherein the web browser application uses UPnP protocols to detect the UPnP AV rendering device.

In an embodiment, the computer-readable medium has instructions for the first device to perform the step of creating an internal list of available UPnP AV rendering devices connected to the network.

In an embodiment, the computer-readable medium has instructions for the first device to perform the step of communicating with the UPnP AV rendering devices connected to the network to determine capabilities of the rendering devices.

In an embodiment, the computer-readable medium has instructions for the first device to perform the step of displaying a list of one or more available UPnP AV rendering devices connected to the network wherein the list is displayed in the user interface of the first device.

In an embodiment, the computer-readable medium has instructions for the first device to perform the step of presenting a redirection option to allow the user of the first device to redirect an internet multimedia content object displayed in the web page to one of the available UPnP AV rendering devices connected to the network.

In an embodiment, the computer-readable medium has instructions for the first device to perform the step of presenting a bookmark option to allow the user of the first device to create a bookmark wherein the bookmark associates an internet multimedia content object displayed in the web page with one of the available UPnP AV rendering devices connected to the network.

In an embodiment, the computer-readable medium has instructions for the first device to perform the step of presenting a bookmark option to allow the user of the first device to create a bookmark for an internet multimedia content object displayed in the web page wherein the web browser application has a UPnP AV media server component which allows an available UPnP AV rendering device to access the bookmarked internet multimedia content object.

In an embodiment, the computer-readable medium has instructions for the first device to perform the step of presenting a bookmark option to allow the user of the first device to create a bookmark for an internet multimedia content object displayed in the web page wherein the web browser application has a transcoding element which transcodes the internet multimedia content object for compatibility with an available UPnP AV rendering device.

In another embodiment, a computer-readable medium having program instructions is provided. The program instructions have a web browser. application. A first device and a rendering device are connected to a network. Execution of the program instructions by the first device enables the first device to perform the steps of retrieving a web page in response to an input from a user of the first device wherein the web page is retrieved from the internet; displaying the web page in a user interface of the first device wherein the web page displays an internet multimedia content object in a first area of the web page; and presenting a redirection option to allow the user of the first device to redirect the internet multimedia content object to the rendering device wherein the rendering device displays the internet multimedia content object in response to user input selecting the redirection option.

In an embodiment, the web page displays advertising content in a second area of the web page wherein the first area and the second area are separate areas of the web page. Execution of the program instructions by the first device enables the first device to perform the steps of combining the internet multimedia content object and the advertising content; and transmitting the combination of the internet multimedia content object and the advertising content to the rendering device in response to user input selecting the redirection option.

In an embodiment, the internet multimedia content object is a video object viewable within the web page, and the advertising content is an image object separately displayed in the web page.

In an embodiment, the computer-readable medium has instructions for the first device to perform the step of transcoding the advertising content to produce a video object displayable by the rendering device wherein the transcoded advertising content is displayed on the rendering device before the rendering device displays the internet multimedia content object.

In an embodiment, the advertising content has text displayed in the web page separately from the internet multimedia content.

In an embodiment, the web page has machine readable tags which identify the advertising content within the web page.

In an embodiment, the computer-readable medium has instructions for the first device to perform the steps of examining machine readable tags which specify requirements for display of the advertising content when redirecting the internet multimedia content object to a rendering device; and combining the internet multimedia content object and the advertising content in accordance with the requirements.

In an embodiment, a plurality of rendering devices are connected to the network. The computer-readable medium has instructions for the first device to perform the step of presenting a plurality of redirection options wherein each redirection option of the plurality of redirection options corresponds to a different rendering device available in the local area network.

In an embodiment, the redirection option allows the user to specify a UPnP AV rendering device available in the local area network wherein the internet multimedia content object is rendered by the UPnP AV rendering device specified by the user in response to user input selecting the redirection option.

In an embodiment, the computer-readable medium has instructions for the first device to perform the steps of examining digital rights management protection associated with the internet multimedia content object; determining that the digital rights management protection requires the internet multimedia content object to be transferred over a secure connection; and negotiating a secure connection to transfer the internet multimedia content object to the rendering device in response to the determination.

In a further embodiment, a computer-readable medium having program instructions is provided. The program instructions have a web browser application. A first device and a rendering device are connected to a network. Execution of the program instructions by the first device enables the first device to perform the steps of retrieving web pages from web servers accessible via the internet at the direction of a user of the first device; displaying the web pages in a user interface of the first device wherein the web pages provide access to internet multimedia content objects; presenting bookmark options which correspond to the internet multimedia content objects wherein selection of a bookmark option by the user of the first device creates a bookmark for the corresponding internet multimedia content object; and providing access to the bookmarked internet multimedia content objects wherein the web browser application has a media server component which provides access to the bookmarked internet multimedia content objects wherein the rendering device accesses the bookmarked internet multimedia content objects using the media server component.

In an embodiment, the media server component is a UPnP AV media server which makes the bookmarked internet multimedia content objects available to UPnP AV rendering devices connected to the network.

In an embodiment, the media server component makes the bookmarked internet multimedia content objects available when the web browser application is not being actively used.

In an embodiment, the media server component sends messages to rendering devices in the network to indicate the availability of internet multimedia content objects previously bookmarked by a user of the first device.

It is, therefore, an advantage of the present invention to provide a system and a method for managing and/or rendering internet multimedia content in a network.

Another advantage of the present invention is to provide a system and a method for managing and/or rendering internet multimedia content in a network that enable rendering devices in the network to access the complete collection of internet multimedia content.

And, another advantage of the present invention is to provide a system and a method for managing and/or rendering internet multimedia content in a network that render the internet multimedia content in a home network without downloading the internet multimedia content to a media server in the home network.

Yet another advantage of the present invention is to provide a system and a method for managing and/or rendering internet multimedia content in a network that access the complete collection of the internet multimedia content using a web browser interface.

Still further, an advantage of the present invention is to provide a system and a method for managing and/or rendering internet multimedia content in a network that enable the user to send the internet multimedia content to any compatible rendering device in the network.

And, another advantage of the present invention is to provide a system and a method for managing and/or rendering internet multimedia content in a network that implement a user interface which combines web browsing tasks with the tasks of selecting, managing and controlling rendering devices in the network.

Yet another advantage of the present invention is to provide a system and a method for managing and/or rendering internet multimedia content in a network that organize and manage both the internet multimedia content and locally stored multimedia content to provide access to all multimedia content of interest to the user.

Still further, an advantage of the present invention is to provide a system and a method for managing and/or rendering internet multimedia content in a network that may be implemented as a “plug-in” to an existing web browser.

And, another advantage of the present invention is to provide a system and a method for managing and/or rendering internet multimedia content in a network that interpret and apply digital rights management technology for explicitly protected multimedia content.

Still further, an advantage of the present invention is to provide a system and a method for managing and/or rendering internet multimedia content in a network that detect, display and enforce terms of use associated with the internet multimedia content.

Another advantage of the present invention is to provide a system and a method for managing and/or rendering internet multimedia content in a network which detect advertising content associated with the internet multimedia content and/or ensure that the advertising content is displayed effectively and/or appropriately in the network.

Yet another advantage of the present invention is to provide a system and a method for managing and/or rendering internet multimedia content in a network that find, retrieve, bookmark and/or organize the internet multimedia content in a web browser and provide access to the internet multimedia content to rendering devices, control points and/or multimedia clients.

Moreover, an advantage of the present invention is to provide a system and a method for managing and/or rendering internet multimedia content in a network that determine which of the rendering devices in the network are capable of rendering specific multimedia content.

Additional features and advantages of the present invention are described in, and will be apparent from, the detailed description of the presently preferred embodiments and from the drawings.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 illustrates a prior art system for rendering internet multimedia content.

FIG. 2 illustrates a prior art system for rendering internet multimedia content.

FIG. 3 illustrates a system for managing and/or rendering internet multimedia content in a network in an embodiment of the present invention.

FIG. 4 illustrates an application for managing and/or rendering internet multimedia content in a network in an embodiment of the present invention.

FIG. 5 illustrates a browser user interface in an embodiment of the present invention.

FIG. 6 illustrates a browser user interface in an embodiment of the present invention.

FIG. 7 illustrates a browser user interface in an embodiment of the present invention.

FIG. 8 illustrates a system for managing and/or rendering internet multimedia content in a network in an embodiment of the present invention.

FIG. 9 illustrates a flowchart of a method for managing and/or rendering internet multimedia content in a network in an embodiment of the present invention.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS

The present invention generally relates to a system and a method for managing and/or rendering internet multimedia content in a network. More specifically, the present invention relates to a system and a method that utilize an application to render the internet multimedia content and/or locally stored multimedia content on one or more rendering devices in the network. The application may provide web browser functions, such as, for example, requesting, receiving, processing, decoding and/or rendering the internet multimedia content. The application may send the internet multimedia content to one or more rendering devices in a home network for rendering. The application may have an enhanced user interface which may enable a user to select the internet multimedia content and a rendering device in the home network, send the internet multimedia content to the rendering device and/or control rendering of the internet multimedia content on the rendering device. The application may manage both the internet multimedia content and the locally stored multimedia content in the network.

Referring now to the drawings wherein like numerals refer to like parts, FIG. 3 generally illustrates a system 10 for managing and/or rendering internet multimedia content in a network. The system 10 may have an application 15 which may be connected to the internet 25 by a network 20. In a preferred embodiment, the network 20 may be a home network. The network 20 may have connections that are wired or wireless. For example, the network 20 may be based on one or more of the following technologies: Ethernet/wired LAN, IEEE 1394 (“Fire Wire”) and/or IEEE 802.11 (“WiFi”). The network may utilize other technologies not listed herein. The present invention is not limited to a specific embodiment of the network 20.

The application 15 may use the network 20 and/or the internet 25 to access one or more internet content sources, such as, for example, a web server, a multimedia server and/or any source of internet multimedia content. For example, the internet content sources may provide the internet multimedia content to the application 15 using well-known internet delivery protocols, such as, for example, Hypertext Transfer Protocol (“HTTP”), Real Time Streaming Protocol (“RTSP”), Transmission Control Protocol (“TCP”), User Datagram Protocol (“UDP”) and/or Real-time Transport Protocol (“RTP”). For example, the application 15 may access a first internet content source 31, a second internet content source 32 and/or a third internet content source 33 (collectively “the internet content sources 31, 32, 33”).

The application 15 may use the network 20 to access one or more local content sources, such as, for example, a personal computer; a laptop computer; a Network Attached Storage (“NAS”) device which may have server capability; a Digital Video Recorder which may have server capability; a portable computing device which may have server capability, such as a mobile telephone or a personal digital assistant; and/or a media capture device, such as a digital still camera or a camcorder, which may have server capability. For example, the application 15 may access a local content source 35. The present invention is not limited to a specific embodiment of the internet content sources or the local content sources or a specific number of the internet content sources or the local content sources. The system 10 does not have an upper limit to a number of internet content sources or local content sources which may be accessed by the application 15.

The application 15 may be connected to one or more rendering devices by the network 20. The rendering devices may be capable of receiving multimedia content using the network 20 and/or rendering the multimedia content for a user 40. The rendering devices may be, for example, a DLNA-compliant television, a DLNA-compliant set-top box connected to a television which may or may not be DLNA-compliant, a DLNA-compliant stereo system, a DLNA-compliant audio adapter device connected to a stereo system which may or may not be DLNA-compliant, a DLNA-compliant photo frame, a personal computer, a laptop computer, a mobile device, a mobile telephone, a personal digital assistant, a video game console, a UPnP AV rendering device and/or the like. For example, a first rendering device 21, a second rendering device 22 and/or a third rendering device 23 (collectively “the rendering devices 21, 22, 23”) may be connected to the application 15 by the network 20. The multimedia content may be and/or may have audio content, video content, audiovisual content, digital photos and/or the like. For example, the multimedia content may be the internet multimedia content and/or multimedia content locally stored in the network 20. The present invention is not limited to a specific embodiment of the rendering devices or the multimedia content.

The application 15 may be provided by and/or stored by a computer readable medium, such as, for example, a compact disc, a DVD, a computer memory, a hard drive and/or the like.

The computer readable medium may enable the network 20 to execute the application 15. The application 15 may reside on a device connected to the network 20, such as, for example, a personal computer, a laptop computer, a mobile device, a dedicated stand-alone device, a network-capable television, a network-capable set-top box, a network-capable stereo system that may have a user interface screen, a network-capable audio adapter device that may have a user interface screen and/or the like. The network 20 may have more than one device that may execute the application 15. The present invention is not limited to a specific embodiment of the device on which the application 15 may reside.

The user 40 may access the application 15 for web browsing tasks using a user interface. Thus, the user 40 may use the user interface of the application 15 to search for the internet multimedia content, to retrieve and display web pages, to navigate within the web pages, to select links within the web pages, to retrieve and/or play the internet multimedia content which may be accessible from the web pages, and/or other common web browser tasks and functionalities which are known to one having ordinary skill in the art. If the application 15 renders the internet multimedia content within the user interface of the application 15, the internet multimedia content may be rendered within a webpage, or the internet multimedia content may be rendered in a separate multimedia player window.

The application 15 may display playback controls to allow the user 40 to control rendering of the internet multimedia content. For example, the playback controls may enable the user 40 to play, pause, seek forward, seek backward, replay from the beginning and/or the like. The playback controls may enable the application 15 to support rendering and/or control of internet multimedia content similar to a typical web browser.

The application 15 may identify the internet multimedia content which the user 40 may be accessing and/or may be consuming using the user interface of the application 15. The application 15 may present enhanced multimedia options for the internet multimedia content. The enhanced multimedia options may enable the user to distribute the internet multimedia content to one or more of the rendering devices 21, 22, 23 in the network 20. The enhanced multimedia options may enable the user 40 to view which of the rendering devices 21, 22, 23 may be available and/or to select an available rendering device from the rendering devices 21, 22, 23 to transfer the internet multimedia content to the selected rendering device.

The application 15 may establish one or more of the rendering devices 21, 22, 23 as a default rendering device. The internet multimedia content may be transferred to the default rendering device without selecting from the rendering devices 21, 22, 23. The application 15 may allow the user 40 to establish a default rendering device for different content types. For example, the first rendering device 21 may be established as the default rendering device for audio content, and/or the second rendering device 22 may be established as the default rendering device for video content.

The enhanced multimedia options may enable the user 40 to add the internet multimedia content to a list of bookmarks so that a specific multimedia content object may be retrieved later by the user 40. The application 15 may enable the user 40 to add multimedia content files stored in the network 20 to the list of bookmarks. For example, the application 15 may add multimedia content files stored in the local content source 35 to the list of bookmarks. As a further example, the multimedia content files added to the list of bookmarks may be stored by devices connected to the network 20, such as, for example, file servers and/or personal computers. The application 15 may enable the user 40 to organize the bookmarks into categories, areas, folders and/or the like without regard to whether individual bookmarks refer to the internet multimedia content or to the multimedia content files stored in the network 20. The application 15 may enable the user 40 to associate a default rendering device with one or more of the bookmarks so that selection of the bookmark may initiate rendering of the associated multimedia content by the default rendering device without selection from the rendering devices 21, 22, 23. The application 15 may enable the user 40 to associate a default rendering device to a bookmark category, area, folder and/or the like so that selection of any bookmark in the associated category, area and/or folder may direct rendering of the associated multimedia content by the default rendering device without selection from the rendering devices 21, 22, 23.

The application 15 may enable the user 40 to create one or more playlists based on the bookmarks. The playlist may enumerate a list of multimedia content objects which may be, for example, the internet multimedia content and/or the multimedia content files stored in the network 20. The list of multimedia content objects may be played back in sequence on one or more of the rendering devices 21, 22, 23 in the network 20. The playlist may refer to the internet multimedia content, the multimedia content files stored in the network 20 and/or a combination of the internet multimedia content objects and the multimedia content files stored in the network 20. The application 15 may enable the user to play the multimedia content objects of the playlist within the user interface of the application 15. The application 15 may enable the user 40 to direct the multimedia content objects of the playlist to one or more of the rendering devices 21, 22, 23 in the network 20. The application 15 may enable the user 40 to associate a default rendering device with the playlist so that later rendering of the multimedia content objects of the playlist may be directed to the default rendering device without selection from the rendering devices 21, 22, 23.

FIG. 4 illustrates a black-box diagram of the application 15 in an embodiment of the present invention. The application 15 may have web browser components. For example, the components of the application 15 may be a browser user interface 50, a web browser application 60 and/or one or more multimedia players 70. The browser user interface 50 may present browser controls that may enable the user 40 to perform web browser tasks using the application 15. For example, the browser user interface 50 may enable the user 40 to search for internet content, to retrieve and display web pages, to navigate within the web pages, to select links within the web pages, to retrieve and play the internet multimedia content which may be accessible from the web pages and/or other common web browser tasks and functionalities known to one having ordinary skill in the art. The browser user interface 50 may accept user input using input means associated with the device on which the application 15 resides. For example, the input means may be a keyboard, a keypad, a mouse, a 4-way navigation pad, a click wheel, a joystick, a touch screen, a set of programmable “soft keys,” a series of buttons on a remote control associated with a television or a set-top box and/or the like. The “soft keys” may be buttons which may perform a function dependent on text shown on a display screen adjacent to the buttons. The present invention is not limited to a specific embodiment of the input means.

The web browser application 60 may retrieve the internet content from remote servers, such as, for example, the internet content sources 31, 32, 33; may process and/or may interpret the internet content; may display the internet content to the user 40 using the browser user interface 50;

and/or may perform other web browser tasks known to one having ordinary skill in the art. The web browser application 60 may retrieve, may process, may decode and/or may render the internet multimedia content. The browser user interface 50 may render the internet multimedia content retrieved, processed and/or decoded by the web browser application 60. The multimedia player 70 that may be connected to and/or may be associated with the web browser application 60 may receive, may process, may decode and/or may render the internet multimedia content. In an embodiment, the internet multimedia content and/or the multimedia content files stored in the network 20 may be received by the web browser application 60. The web browser application 60 may transmit the internet multimedia content and/or the multimedia content files stored in the network 20 to the multimedia player 70 which may process and/or may decode the internet multimedia content and/or the multimedia content files stored in the network 20. The multimedia player 70 may transmit decoded multimedia content to the web browser application 60 which may render the decoded multimedia content using the browser user interface 50.

The present invention is not limited to a specific arrangement of the web browser application 60 and the multimedia player 70. One having ordinary skill in the art may recognize alternative embodiments. For example, the multimedia content may be received directly by the multimedia player 70 without passing through the web browser application 60. As another example, the multimedia player 70 may directly pass the decoded multimedia content to the browser user interface 50, to a display of the device on which the application 15 resides and/or to an additional device associated with the device on which the application 15 resides. The present invention is not limited to the arrangement of the components of the application 15 illustrated in FIG. 4.

As FIG. 4 generally illustrates, an embodiment of the application 15 may have additional components which may provide enhanced multimedia functionality of the application 15. The application 15 may have an enhanced multimedia user interface 80 which may enable the user 40 to control the enhanced multimedia functionality of the application 15. The application 15 may have a transcoding engine 90 which may transcode, may reformat and/or may repurpose the internet multimedia content for compatibility with one or more of the rendering devices 21, 22, 23 in the network 20. The application 15 may have a media server component 100 which may transfer the multimedia content to one or more of the rendering devices 21, 22, 23 in the network 20.

The application 15 may have a renderer discovery and control component 110 (hereafter “the RDC component 110”) which may determine available rendering devices in the network 20, such as, for example, the rendering devices 21, 22, 23. The RDC component 110 may determine capabilities of the available rendering devices in the network 20, such as, for example, capabilities of the rendering devices 21, 22, 23. The RDC component 110 may communicate with the available rendering devices in the network 20 to initiate, maintain and/or control delivery of the multimedia content to and/or rendering of the multimedia content by the available rendering devices. The application 15 may have a content management component 120 which may enable the user 40 to organize and/or to manage the internet multimedia content and/or the multimedia content files stored in the network 20, The content management component 120 may organize and/or may manage bookmarks, playlists, preferences and settings which may be associated with the multimedia content.

The enhanced multimedia user interface BO of the application 15 may present enhanced multimedia options associated with an active multimedia object. The active multimedia object may be the internet multimedia content which the user 40 may be accessing, using and/or consuming using the application 15. For example, the active multimedia object may be the internet multimedia content which the user 40 may be accessing, using and/or consuming on the browser user interface 50 and/or the multimedia player 70. Thus, for each of the active multimedia objects, the enhanced multimedia options presented by the application 15 may be appropriate for the active multimedia object.

In an embodiment, the enhanced multimedia options may be presented using elements of the enhanced multimedia user interface 80 that may be co-located with the active multimedia object. For example, the enhanced multimedia options may be superimposed over a video object and/or an image object of the active multimedia object. As a further example, the enhanced multimedia options may appear as a graphic button, a graphic tab and/or the like located in proximity to the video object and/or the image object of the active multimedia object. The enhanced multimedia options may be integrated with the playback controls for the active multimedia object. The enhanced multimedia options may utilize a drop-down menu, a pull-out drawer, a sequence of buttons and/or icons, a carousel of buttons and/or icons and/or any other user interface elements for displaying and selecting options as known to one skilled in the art.

The enhanced multimedia options may be, for example, “Redirect,” “Bookmark,” “Record,” “Properties” and/or “Manage” as described in further detail hereafter. In response to selection of the enhanced multimedia option “Redirect,” the application 15 may direct one or more of the available rendering devices to render the active multimedia object. For example, the application 15 may control delivery of the active multimedia object to one or more of the rendering devices 21, 22, 23. In response to selection of the enhanced multimedia option “Bookmark,” the application 15 may create a bookmark for the active multimedia object. In response to selection of the enhanced multimedia option “Record,” the application 15 may store the active multimedia object as a digital multimedia content file on a local server in the network 20, such as, for example, the local content source 35. In response to selection of the enhanced multimedia option “Properties,” the application 15 may display detailed information about the active multimedia object. In response to selection of the enhanced multimedia option “Manage,” the application 15 may provide a menu that has additional content management options as discussed in further detail hereafter.

The application 15 may present a plurality of “Redirect” options so that each of the plurality of “Redirect” options may correspond to one or more of the available rendering devices in the network 20, such as, for example, one or more of the rendering devices 21, 22, 23. The application 15 may determine which of the available rendering devices may be capable of rendering the active multimedia object, and/or the plurality of “Redirect” options may correspond to the available rendering devices which may be capable of rendering the active multimedia object. User input may define a selected “Redirect” option of the plurality of “Redirect” options, and the rendering device associated with the selected “Redirect” option may initiate rendering of the active multimedia object. In response to selection of one of the plurality of “Redirect” options, the application 15 may initiate repurposing and/or transmitting the active multimedia object to the rendering device associated with the selected “Redirect” option, and/or the rendering device associated with the selected “Redirect” option may begin rendering the active multimedia object.

The application 15 may present additional controls to enable the user 40 to control rendering of the active multimedia content on the associated rendering device. The application 15 may discontinue local rendering of the active multimedia object within the browser user interface 50, or the application 15 may continue to render the active multimedia object within the browser user interface 50 in approximate synchronization with rendering of the active content object by the rendering device associated with the selected “Redirect” option.

The enhanced multimedia option “Bookmark” may create a bookmark for the active multimedia object so that subsequent selection of the bookmark may enable the active multimedia object to be retrieved, repurposed and/or redirected to one or more of the available rendering devices in the network 20, such as, for example, one or more of the rendering devices 21, 22, 23. The application 15 may enable the user 40 to establish a default rendering device for the bookmark, such as, for example, when the bookmark is created. The application 15 may establish the default rendering device for the bookmark as the rendering device to which the user 40 redirects the active multimedia object using one of the plurality of “Redirect” options.

In response to selection of the enhanced multimedia option “Record,” the application 15 may store the active multimedia object as a digital multimedia content file on a local server in the network 20, such as, for example, the local content source 35. The enhanced multimedia option “Record” may enable the user 40 to select a location for storage of the active multimedia object as the digital multimedia content file. The enhanced multimedia option “Record” option may enable the user 40 to create a filename, a full name, a summary comment and/or other properties of the digital multimedia content file stored on the local server. The application 15 may determine if the active multimedia object may be appropriate for recording. The active multimedia object may not be appropriate for recording, such as, for example, an active multimedia object protected by digital rights management technology (hereafter “DRM technology”). As a further example, an active content object lacking definite timeline boundaries may not be appropriate for recording. An internet radio channel may not have definite timeline boundaries, for example. The application 15 may present the enhanced multimedia option “Record” for the active multimedia objects which may be appropriate for recording.

The enhanced multimedia option “Properties” may enable the user 40 to view properties of the active multimedia object. The properties may be content properties, such as, for example, an object title, an object classification and/or genre, an associated artist, an associated television series, an associated music album and/or the like. The properties may be file properties, such as, for example, a file size, a file format, a playback duration, one or more media codecs, one or more media encoding parameters and/or the like. The properties may be legal properties, such as, for example, an indication of protection of the active multimedia object by DRM technology, an indication of protection of the active multimedia object by terms of use, a list of one or more usage restrictions and/or the like.

The enhanced multimedia option “Manage” may enable the user 40 to access the additional content management options, such as, for example, a bookmark management option, a playlist management option, a file management option and/or the like. The user 40 may select the bookmark management option to organize, arrange, classify, create, modify, rename, delete and/or invoke bookmarks associated with multimedia content objects. The user 40 may select the playlist management option to create, modify, rename, delete and/or use playlists. The user 40 may select the file management option to browse, organize, arrange, classify, rename, delete, and/or use the multimedia content files which may be stored on the local server. For example, the multimedia content files stored in the network 20 may be the digital multimedia content files created using the enhanced multimedia option “Record” of the application 15 and/or multimedia content files stored in the network 20 by other means.

FIGS. 5-7 generally illustrate presentation of the enhanced multimedia options to the user 40 in embodiments of the present invention. FIG. 5 generally illustrates the browser user interface 50 having the enhanced multimedia controls 200 for an active video object 130 in an embodiment of the present invention. The browser user interface 50 of the application 15 may display the browser controls 129 and/or the internet content 125. The internet content 125 may include the active video object 130. The user 40 may view the active video object 130 in the browser user interface 50 of the application 15. The user 40 may control rendering of the active video object 130 using the playback controls 140 associated with the active video object 130. Thus, the active video object 130 may be viewed and/or may be controlled using the browser user interface 50 of the application 15.

The application 15 may display the enhanced multimedia controls 200 in association with the active video object 130. The enhanced multimedia controls 200 may be displayed as an overlay on the active video object 130 as generally illustrated in FIG. 5. The enhanced multimedia controls 200 may be continuously present, or, alternatively, the enhanced multimedia controls may be displayed and/or may be provided after a specific action by the user 40. For example, the enhanced multimedia controls 200 may be displayed and/or may be provided after the user 40 initiates rendering of the active video object 130 using the playback controls 140. As another example, the enhanced multimedia controls 200 may be displayed and/or may be provided after the user 40 positions an arrow or other pointing icon within boundaries of the active video object.

The enhanced multimedia controls 200 may be displayed as graphic icons which may represent the enhanced multimedia options of the application 15. The graphic icons may be displayed as a flat list of icons, a rotating carousel of icons, a rectangular arrangement of icons and/or any other arrangement known to one having ordinary skill in the art. The present invention is not limited to a specific arrangement or a specific presentation of the graphic icons.

The user 40 may select and/or may activate one or more of the graphic icons to invoke a corresponding enhanced multimedia option 200 of the application 15. For example, one or more of the graphic icons may represent the enhanced multimedia option “Redirect” for directing the active video object to one of the rendering devices 21, 22, 23, such as, for example, a living room television. One of the graphic icons may be an image representing the living room television. The user 40 may select and/or may activate the graphic icon representing the living room television to direct the living room television to render the active video object. The application 15 may transmit the active video object to the living room television.

The enhanced multimedia controls 200 may have a plurality of graphic icons. Each of the plurality of graphic icons may correspond to one of the plurality of “Redirect” options and/or one or more of the rendering devices 21, 22, 23. The enhanced multimedia controls 200 may have graphic icons which may represent other enhanced multimedia options of the application 15, such as, for example, the enhanced multimedia option “Bookmark,” the enhanced multimedia option “Record,” the enhanced multimedia option “Properties” and/or the enhanced multimedia option “Manage.” The enhanced multimedia options which may be displayed may vary based on the embodiment of the application 15. The present invention is not limited to a specific embodiment of which enhanced multimedia options may be displayed.

FIG. 6 generally illustrates the browser user interface 50 having the enhanced multimedia controls 200 for an active image object 150 in an embodiment of the present invention. The browser user interface 50 of the application 15 may display the browser controls 129 and/or the internet content 125. The internet content 125 may include the active image object 150. The active image object 150 may represent a collection of images which may be viewed within the browser user interface 50 of the application 15 as a sequence of images known as a slideshow. The user 40 may control rendering of the collection of images by using the playback controls 140 associated with the active image object 150. Thus, the active image object 150 may be viewed and/or may be controlled using the browser user interface 50 of the application 15.

The application 15 may display the enhanced multimedia controls 200 in association with the active image object 150. The enhanced multimedia controls 200 may be displayed as a menu which may appear to slide out of the active image object 150 as illustrated in FIG. 6. The application 15 may present an activation control 155 in association with the active image object. The activation control 155 may control appearance and/or disappearance of the menu providing the enhanced multimedia controls 200. For example, the activation control 155 may be a !“Menu” button. Selection of the “Menu” button may cause the menu of the enhanced multimedia controls 200 to appear, such as, for example, by appearing to slide out from the active image object, or disappear, such as, for example, by appearing to slide into the active image object. The application 15 may provide access to the enhanced multimedia controls 200 for the active image object while minimizing disturbance to the internet content that may surround the active image object.

One having ordinary skill in the art may recognize other means of displaying the menu of the enhanced multimedia controls in the browser user interface 50. For example, the menu may appear to “pop up” in response to “right-clicking” of the mouse on the active image object by the user 40. The present invention is not limited to a specific embodiment of means of accessing and/or activating the menu of the enhanced multimedia controls 200.

The enhanced multimedia controls 200 may be provided by options displayed in the menu. The user 40 may select and/or may activate one or more of the options to invoke a corresponding one of the enhanced multimedia options of the application 15. As illustrated in FIG. 6, the application 15 may display the plurality of “Redirect” options that may correspond to the rendering devices 21, 22, 23 in the network 20. The application 15 may limit the plurality of “Redirect” options to only correspond to the rendering devices 21, 22, 23 which may be capable of rendering the active image object. The user 40 may select and/or may activate one or more of the plurality of “Redirect” options to direct the corresponding rendering device to render the active image object.

For example, in FIG. 6, R1 may represent the first rendering device 21 which may be the living room television, R2 may represent the second rendering device 22 which may be a digital photo frame in the bedroom and/or R3 may represent the third rendering device 23 which may be a personal computer in the den. In this case, the user 40 may select the “Redirect to R2” option to initiate rendering of the active image object on the digital photo frame in the bedroom. The enhanced multimedia controls may have other enhanced multimedia options of the application 15, such as, for example, the enhanced multimedia option “Bookmark,” the enhanced multimedia option “Record,” the enhanced multimedia option “Properties” and/or the enhanced multimedia option “Manage.” The present invention is not limited to a specific embodiment of which enhanced multimedia options may be displayed.

FIG. 7 generally illustrates the browser user interface 50 having the enhanced multimedia controls 200 for an active audio object. The browser interface 50 of the application 15 may display the browser controls 129 and/or the internet content 125. The internet content 125 may have the playback controls 140 and/or a status display 160 corresponding to the active audio object. The active audio object may represent a single digital music file, a set of digital music files, an internet radio channel, a music stream and/or the like. Audio corresponding to the active audio object may be rendered by a local audio device associated with the application 15, such as, for example, a personal computer sound card, headphones, speakers and/or the like. The user 40 may control rendering of the audio by using the playback controls 140 associated with the active audio object. Thus, the active audio object may be rendered and/or may be controlled using the browser user interface 50 of the application 15.

The application 15 may display the enhanced multimedia controls 200 in association with the active audio object. The enhanced multimedia controls may be displayed as a set of buttons and/or graphic icons located in proximity to the playback controls and/or the status display for the active audio object as illustrated in FIG. 7. The application 15 may present a central set of the enhanced multimedia controls 200 which may apply to any active audio object. For example, the application 15 may display a “drop-down menu” for the audio. The central set of the enhanced multimedia controls 200 may appear within the browser controls 129 and/or may be used to invoke the enhanced multimedia functions of the application 15 for the active audio object which the local audio device may be rendering.

The enhanced multimedia controls 200 may provide and/or may display one or more of the enhanced multimedia option “Redirect” to direct an audio rendering device of the rendering devices 21, 22, 23 in the network 20 to render the active audio object. In the embodiment depicted in FIG. 7, the enhanced multimedia option “Redirect” 165 may be associated with a specific stereo system in the network 20. A graphic icon which may correspond to the enhanced multimedia option “Redirect” 165 may indicate the specific stereo system using a text label, a graphic depiction of the specific stereo system and/or the like. The user 40 may select and/or may activate the enhanced multimedia option “Redirect” 165 to initiate rendering of the active audio object by the specific stereo system.

The central set of the enhanced multimedia controls 200 may provide and/or may display other functions, such as, for example, the enhanced multimedia option “Record” 170 and/or the enhanced multimedia option “Menu” 175. Selection of the enhanced multimedia option “Record” 170 may enable the user 40 to store a portion or an entirety of the audio content corresponding to the active audio object. The portion and/or the entirety of the audio content may be stored as one or more audio files, such as, for example, in the local server of the network 20. For example, the audio file may be stored in the local content source 35.

Selection of the enhanced multimedia option “Menu” 175 may enable the user 40 to access a menu that may have one or more of the additional enhanced multimedia options of the application 15, such as, for example, the enhanced multimedia option “Bookmark,” the enhanced multimedia option “Properties,” the enhanced multimedia option “Manage,” and/or additional “Redirect” options corresponding to additional rendering devices in the network 20. The application 15 may display limited options to enable access to the enhanced multimedia options that may be most commonly used for the active audio object. The enhanced multimedia option “Menu” may access the additional enhanced multimedia options. The present invention is not limited to a specific embodiment of which enhanced multimedia options may be displayed or an arrangement of the enhanced multimedia options.

If the application 15 directs a target rendering device of the available rendering devices in the network 20 to render the active multimedia object, the application 15 may enable the user 40 to control delivery and/or rendering of the active multimedia object on the target rendering device. For example, the target rendering device may be one or more of the rendering devices 21, 22, 23. The application 15 may present additional playback controls which may enable the user 40 to remotely control the playback of the content on the target rendering device. The additional playback controls may have and/or may be, for example, “Play,” “Pause,” “Stop,” “Rewind,” “Fast Forward,” “Seek to a specific time,” “Volume Up,” “Volume Down,” “Previous object,” “Next object” and/or other playback controls known to one having ordinary skill in the art. In an embodiment, the additional playback controls may be only displayed during rendering of the active multimedia object on the target rendering device.

Alternatively, the application 15 may not display and/or may not provide the additional playback controls. The application 15 may enable the user 40 to control the rendering by the target rendering device using the playback controls 140 which may be used to control rendering of the active multimedia object within the browser user interface 50 of the application 15. The application 15 may continue to display and/or to render the active multimedia object within the browser user interface 50 of the application 15 while substantially simultaneously and/or substantially synchronously rendering the active multimedia object on the target rendering device. For example, the playback controls 140 of the browser user interface 50 may be used to control rendering of the active multimedia object by both the browser user interface 50 and the target rendering device.

During rendering of the active multimedia object on the target rendering device, the user 40 may use the browser user interface 50 of the application 15 to navigate to a different webpage from the webpage having and/or providing the multimedia content. In an embodiment, the application 15 may terminate the rendering of the active multimedia object on the target rendering device in response to navigation from the webpage having and/or providing the active multimedia object. In another embodiment, the application 15 may continue to render the active multimedia object on the target rendering device. The application 15 may display and/or may continue to display the additional playback controls so that the user 40 may continue to control the rendering of the active multimedia object by the target rendering device.

Referring again to FIG. 4, the application 15 may have the RDC component 110. The RDC component 110 may determine the available rendering devices in the network 20, such as, for example, the rendering devices 21, 22, 23. The RDC component 110 may determine the capabilities of the available rendering devices in the network 20 such as, for example, the capabilities of the rendering devices 21, 22, 23. The available rendering devices in the network 20 may transmit messages in the network 20 to communicate availability and/or the capabilities to other devices in the network 20. The RDC component 110 may receive the messages from the available rendering devices. The RDC component 110 may use the network to communicate with the available rendering devices to determine a current status of the available rendering devices and/or to determine additional capability details for the available rendering devices.

The RDC component 110 may create, may maintain and/or may update an internal list of the available rendering devices in the network 20. The internal list may have the capabilities of the available rendering devices. The capabilities of the available rendering devices may have and/or may be, for example, media types, such as, for example, audio, video and/or image; multimedia codecs, such as, for example, AAC Audio codec, H.264 video codec and/or the like; profiles and/or levels associated with the multimedia codecs; transport methods; and/or DRM technologies which may be supported by the available rendering devices. The present invention is not limited to a specific embodiment of the capabilities which may be determined by the RDC component 110. The RDC component 110 may be and/or may act as a UPnP AV Control Point and/or a DLNA Control Point.

In response to user input directing the target rendering device to render the active multimedia object, such as, for example, selection of the enhanced multimedia option “Redirect,” the RDC component 110 may communicate with the target rendering device. The RDC component 110 may instruct the target rendering device to request, to retrieve, to process and/or to render the active multimedia object. The RDC component 110 may communicate with the target rendering device to control the rendering of the active multimedia object. For example, the RDC component 110 may control the rendering of the active multimedia object by the target rendering device in accordance with the playback controls which may be selected by the user 40. The RDC component 110 may transmit rendering control instructions to the target rendering device. The rendering control instructions may correspond to the additional playback controls, such as, for example, “Play,” “Pause,” “Stop,” “Rewind,” “Fast Forward,” “Seek to a specific time,” “Volume Up,” “Volume Down,” “Previous object,” “Next object” and/or the other playback controls known to one having ordinary skill in the art.

The application 15 may have the transcoding engine 90 which may transcode, may reformat and/or may repurpose the internet multimedia content for compatibility with one or more of the available rendering devices in the network 20, such as, for example, the rendering devices 21, 22, 23. The transcoding engine 90 may receive instructions from the enhanced multimedia user interface BO regarding selection of the internet multimedia content to render and/or the target rendering device. The transcoding engine 90 may communicate with the RDC component 110 to determine the capabilities of the target rendering device. The transcoding engine 90 may access the internet multimedia content using the web browser application 60 and/or the multimedia player 70. The transcoding engine 90 may access the internet multimedia content directly using the Internet. The transcoding engine 90 may process the internet multimedia content to prepare the internet multimedia content for delivery to the target rendering device.

The transcoding engine 90 may transcode the internet multimedia content based on the capabilities of the target rendering device. For example, the transcoding engine 90 may transcode the internet multimedia content to produce transcoded internet multimedia content which may conform to media codecs, profiles and/or levels which may be supported by the target rendering device. The transcoding engine 90 may reformat the internet multimedia content. For example, the transcoding engine 90 may reformat the internet multimedia content to produce reformatted internet multimedia content which may have a delivery format appropriate for the target rendering device.

The transcoding engine 90 may examine digital rights management protection (hereafter “the DRM protection”), if any, of the internet multimedia content to determine restrictions for transferring the internet multimedia content to and/or rendering the content on the target rendering device. The transcoding engine 90 may determine that the restrictions may require secure transfer of the internet multimedia content to the target rendering device. The transcoding engine 90 may reformat the internet multimedia content for secure transfer to the target rendering device, and/or the transcoding engine 90 may inform the media server component 100 that the secure transfer may be required. The reformatting for and/or the communication about the secure transfer may reflect a specific method of secure transfer which may be required by the restrictions.

The transcoding engine 90 may determine that the restrictions for the internet multimedia content do not permit transferring the internet multimedia content to and/or rendering the internet multimedia content on the target rendering device. The transcoding engine 90 may not permit transfer of the internet multimedia content to the target rendering device. The application 15 may inform the user 40 that rendering of the internet multimedia content by the target rendering device may not be allowed due to the restrictions.

The application 15 may have the content management component 120 which may enable the user 40 to create, edit, delete, organize, and/or manage bookmarks, playlists, the internet multimedia content recorded by the application 15 and/or other locally stored multimedia content. Functions of the content management component 120 may be accessible using the enhanced multimedia option “Bookmark” and/or the enhanced multimedia option “Manage” as previously described.

The application 15 may have the media server component 100 which may receive transcoded, reformatted and/or repurposed internet multimedia content from the transcoding engine 90. The media server component 100 may be a web server, an RTSP media server, a UPnP AV media server, a DLNA compliant media server and/or any media server known to one having ordinary skill in the art. The present invention is not limited to a specific embodiment of the media server component 100. The media server component 100 may deliver the transcoded, reformatted and/or repurposed internet multimedia content to the target rendering device using the network 20. The media server component 100 may store and/or may buffer a portion and/or an entirety of the transcoded, reformatted and/or repurposed internet multimedia content received from the transcoding engine 90.

The media server component 100 may be visible to and/or may be accessible to rendering devices, other devices, control points and/or multimedia clients in the network 20. The media server component 100 may identify, may indicate availability of and/or may provide access to the multimedia content identified by the application 15, such as, for example, the internet multimedia content bookmarked by the user 40; the internet multimedia content recorded by the user 40; the internet multimedia content retrieved, browsed and/or consumed by the user 40; the multimedia content files stored in the network 20; and/or the playlists created by the user 40.

The media server component 100 may indicate the availability of the multimedia content based on categories, areas and/or folders which the user 40 may have created using the content management component 120 of the application 15. The media server component 100 may indicate the availability of the multimedia content and/or may provide access to the multimedia content to the rendering devices, the other devices, the control points and/or the multimedia clients in the network 20. For example, the media server component 100 may indicate the availability of the multimedia content and/or may provide the access to the multimedia content regardless of whether the application 15 is being actively used and/or controlled by the user 40 using the browser user interface 50 and/or the enhanced multimedia user interface 80. Thus, the user 40 may discover, may select and/or may access the multimedia content, such as, for example, the internet multimedia content, directly from devices in the network 20.

For example, the user 40 may discover internet multimedia content using the browser user interface 50 of the application 15. The user 40 may bookmark the internet multimedia content using the enhanced multimedia user interface 80 and/or the content management component 120 of the application 15. The media server component 100 of the application 15 may act as a UPnP AV media server to indicate availability of the bookmarked internet multimedia content to UPnP compliant devices in the network 20. At a later time, the user 40 may watch video content on a UPnP AV compliant television in the network 20. The user 40 may access the media server component 100 of the application 15 using a user interface provided by the UPnP AV compliant television. The availability of the bookmarked internet multimedia content may be indicated to the user 40 by the media server component 100, and/or the user 40 may select a specific bookmark to view the associated multimedia content on the UPnP AV compliant television. In response to selection of the specific bookmark, the UPnP AV compliant television may request the associated multimedia content from the media server component 100 of the application. The application 15 may request the associated multimedia content from a content source that provides the multimedia content associated with the bookmark. The application 15 may receive the multimedia content associated with the bookmark from the content source. The transcoding engine 90 may transcode, may reformat and/or may repurpose the multimedia content for compatibility with the UPnP AV compliant television. The application 15 may begin transmitting the transcoded, reformatted and/or repurposed multimedia content to the UPnP AV compliant television for rendering as the transcoding engine 90 transcodes, reformats and/or repurposes the multimedia content.

The media server component 100 may receive request messages from the target rendering device which may request the transcoded, reformatted and/or repurposed internet multimedia content. The request messages from the target rendering device may request specific portions of the transcoded, reformatted and/or repurposed internet multimedia content. The media server component 100 may receive instructions from the transcoding engine 90 and/or from other components of the application 15. The instructions may direct the media server component 100 to transmit the transcoded, reformatted and/or repurposed internet multimedia content. The instructions may direct the media server component 100 to transmit specific portions of the transcoded, reformatted and/or repurposed internet multimedia content. In response to the request messages and/or the instructions, the media server component 100 may transmit the transcoded, reformatted and/or repurposed internet multimedia content and/or the specific portions to the target rendering device.

In an embodiment, the application 15 may be a self-contained software application for a personal computer, a laptop personal computer, a PDA, a mobile phone and/or another computing device which is capable of running software applications. In another embodiment, the application 15 may be a “plug-in” to an existing web browser. As known to one having ordinary skill in the art, a “plug-in” may be a secondary application that interacts with a host application to provide additional functions to the host application. If the application 15 may be a “plug-in,” the application 15 may have the enhanced multimedia user interface 80, the transcoding engine 90, the media server component 100, the RDC component 110 and/or the content management component 120. The application 15 may connect to an existing web browser which may support a standard plug-in architecture as known to one having ordinary skill in the art. For example, the application 15 may connect as a “plug-in” to a web browser of Internet Explorer (trademark of Microsoft Corp.), Firefox (trademark of Mozilla Foundation), Opera (trademark of Opera Software ASA Norway), Google Chrome (trademark of Google Inc.) and/or the like.

The multimedia content object, such as, for example, the internet multimedia content and/or the multimedia content files stored in the network 20, may have the DRM protection. The DRM protection may make the multimedia content object subject to the restrictions for transfer and/or rendering. The restrictions may vary with the DRM protection and/or with a specific content license which a content provider may have created for the multimedia content. For example, the DRM protection may restrict rendering of the multimedia content object to a specific user and/or to a specific rendering device. The DRM protection may allow unlimited rendering of the multimedia content object, may allow the multimedia content object to be rendered only a limited number of times and/or may allow the multimedia content object to be rendered only during a certain time interval. The DRM protection may allow rendering only on a specific type and/or class of rendering device. The DRM protection may prohibit transmittal to and/or rendering by one or more rendering devices in the network 20. The DRM protection may allow transmittal to and/or rendering by one or more rendering devices in the network 20 but may impose conditions for the transmittal to and/or the rendering by the one or more rendering devices in the network 20. For example, the DRM protection may require a specific type of secure transfer of the content to be used when content is redirected to the target rendering device. The present invention is not limited to a specific embodiment of the DRM protection.

In a first example, the application 15 may encounter internet multimedia content protected by a first DRM protection such that the restrictions allow the user 40 of the application 15 to access, to view and/or to consume the internet multimedia content in a web browser on a specific personal computer. The first DRM protection may allow the user 40 of the application 15 to render the internet multimedia content on an external rendering device if transfer of the internet multimedia content is protected by Digital Transmission Content Protection (“DTCP”). The first DRM protection may define specific compliance rules associated with a DTCP-protected transfer. The user 40 may request the application 15 to render the internet multimedia content on the external rendering device. The application 15 may examine the first DRM protection of the internet multimedia content to determine that the user 40 may be allowed to render the internet multimedia content on the external rendering device. The application 15 may examine the DRM protection for the internet multimedia content to determine that a DTCP-protected export may be required. The application 15 may determine the capabilities of the target rendering device to determine that the target rendering device supports transfer of DTCP-protected content. The application 15 may establish a DTCP-protected channel between the application 15 and the target rendering device which may meet known compliance rules for DTCP-protected export for the first DRM protection. The application 15 may transfer the internet multimedia content to the target rendering device using the DTCP-protected channel.

In a second example, the application 15 may encounter internet multimedia content protected by a second DRM protection. The second DRM protection may prohibit use, display and/or rendering of the internet multimedia content on devices other than personal computers and mobile devices. The application 15 may examine the second DRM protection for the internet multimedia content to determine specific devices and/or device types on which rendering may be allowed. The application 15 may examine a list of the available rendering devices and/or the capabilities of the available rendering devices to determine the available rendering devices for which the second DRM protection may allow rendering of the of the internet multimedia content. For this example, the application 15 may determine that a specific laptop computer and a specific mobile device are the available rendering devices which fulfill the restrictions of the second DRM protection. The application 15 may provide and/or may display “Redirect” options corresponding to the specific laptop computer and the specific mobile device in the enhanced multimedia controls associated with the internet multimedia content. Thus, the application 15 may allow the user 40 to render the internet multimedia content having the second DRM protection to the available rendering devices for which transfer to and/or rendering of the multimedia content object may be allowed under the second DRM protection.

In a third example, the application 15 may encounter internet multimedia content protected by a third DRM protection. The third DRM protection may allow a specific user unlimited rights to render the internet multimedia content on devices owned by the specific user. The third DRM protection may not have rules, restrictions or policies regarding transfer of the internet multimedia content to a location outside of the web browser. Based on the third DRM protection, the application 15 may determine that the internet multimedia content may be rendered by the devices owned by the specific user. Based on the list of the available rendering devices and/or the capabilities of the available rendering devices, the application 15 may determine which of the available rendering devices may be capable of rendering the internet multimedia content. The application 15 may provide and/or may display “Redirect” options corresponding to the available rendering devices capable of rendering the internet multimedia content. For example, the application 15 may provide and/or may display the “Redirect” options in the enhanced multimedia controls associated with the internet multimedia content. Thus, the application 15 may allow the user 40 to render the internet multimedia content having the third DRM protection to the available rendering devices for which transfer to and/or rendering of the multimedia content object may be allowed under the third DRM protection. The application 15 may control the rendering to follow the rules, the restrictions and/or the policies associated with the third DRM protection.

In a fourth example, the application 15 may encounter internet multimedia content protected by a fourth DRM protection. The policies of the fourth DRM protection may require the internet multimedia content protected by the fourth DRM protection to be rendered by a specific multimedia player provided by the content provider. Based on the policies of the fourth DRM protection, the application 15 may determine that “Redirect” options are not allowed for the internet multimedia content protected by the fourth DRM protection. The application 15 may not provide and/or may not display the “Redirect” options in the enhanced multimedia controls associated with the internet multimedia content. The application 15 may display a symbol, an icon and/or a notification message in the enhanced multimedia controls to inform the user 40 that the “Redirect” options are not available due to the fourth DRM protection of the internet multimedia content.

The preceding examples generally illustrate how the application 15 may determine which of the available rendering devices in the network 20 may render internet multimedia content based on the DRM protection associated with the internet multimedia content. The application 15 may examine the DRM protection of the internet multimedia content to determine whether the enhanced multimedia option “Record” may be allowed for the internet multimedia content. The application 15 may provide and/or may display the enhanced multimedia option “Record” in the enhanced multimedia controls if the application 15 determines that the DRM protection allows storage of a local copy of the internet multimedia content in the network 20.

The internet multimedia content may be protected by an implicit legal agreement. As known to one having ordinary skill in the art, the legal agreement may be terms of use. The user 40 of the application 15 may implicitly agree to be bound by the terms of use when the user 40 accesses, browses, and/or retrieves the internet multimedia content from a webpage. Typically, the terms of use may be accessible to users of the webpage and may be a legal agreement readable by the user 40. Thus, the application 15 may not be capable of directly accessing, reading, interpreting and/or applying the terms of use.

An embodiment of the application 15 may encourage the user 40 to read and/or to follow the terms of use. The application 15 may parse and/or may examine the webpage and/or the internet multimedia content to identify a displayed link that may provide the terms of use. If the application 15 identifies the terms of use, such as, for example, by identifying the displayed link, the application 15 may provide and/or may display a “Terms of Use” control. For example, the application 15 may display the “Terms of Use” control in the enhanced multimedia controls associated with the internet multimedia content. If the user 40 selects the “Terms of Use” control, the application 15 may display a message that may indicate that the webpage and/or the internet multimedia internet content has the terms of use. The message may indicate responsibility of the user 40 to respect the terms of use for rendering and/or recording the internet multimedia content using the enhanced multimedia controls of the application 15.

The application 15 may provide access to the terms of use so that the user 40 may examine, may read, may understand and/or may follow the terms of use. The application 15 may enable and/or may require the user 40 to indicate that the user 40 has read the terms of use and/or that the user 40 agrees to abide by the terms of use when using the enhanced multimedia controls of the application 15. If the user 40 indicates that the user 40 has read the terms of use and/or that the user 40 agrees to abide by the terms of use, the application 15 may remove the “Terms of Use” control from the enhanced multimedia controls associated with the internet multimedia content. If different internet multimedia content and/or a different webpage are accessed, the application may provide and/or may display the “Terms of Use” control.

In an embodiment, the application 15 may not allow rendering and/or recording of the internet multimedia content by the user 40 until the user 40 indicates agreement to the terms of use associated with the internet multimedia content. The user 40 may indicate agreement generally, such as, for example, during a first use of the application 15 and/or without regard to the specific webpage, and/or may indicate agreement for each unique webpage accessed by the user 40.

In an embodiment, the terms of use for the webpage and/or the internet multimedia content may be encoded to a machine-readable terms of use protocol which may be accessed by the application 15. The application 15 may restrict presentation and/or use of the enhanced multimedia controls of the application 15 in accordance with the machine-readable terms of use protocol. The machine-readable terms of use protocol may indicate properties and/or restrictions which may be associated with the terms of use for the webpage and/or the internet multimedia content. The properties and/or the restrictions may be, for example, whether the internet multimedia content may be stored using the enhanced multimedia option “Record,” whether the user 40 may share local copies of the internet multimedia content, whether the internet multimedia content may be transferred to other rendering devices using the “Redirect” option, whether the internet multimedia content may be transcoded for rendering, whether the internet multimedia content may be reformatted for rendering and/or the like. For each of the properties and/or the restrictions, the application 15 may determine if the property and/or the restriction is “Yes,” “No,” or “Not Indicated.”

The machine-readable terms of use protocol may indicate other allowed uses and/or usage restrictions for the internet multimedia content. The other allowed uses and/or usage restrictions may be indicated in the terms of use for the webpage. For example, the machine-readable terms of use protocol may indicate specific rendering device types and/or properties restricted for the “Redirect” option. For example, the terms of use for a webpage may allow rendering on a television but may limit an allowed display size. The present invention is not limited to a specific embodiment of the terms of use, representation of the terms of use by the application 15 or encoding of the machine-readable terms of use protocol.

The machine-readable terms of use protocol may be provided by the webpage and/or may be delivered to the application 15 with the internet multimedia content associated with the webpage. Alternatively, as generally illustrated in FIG. 8, the machine-readable terms of use protocol may be available from a terms of use server 180 which may be accessible by the application 15 using the network 20 and/or the internet 25. The internet content sources 31, 32, 33 may be different sources of the internet multimedia content. Each of the internet content sources 31, 32, 33 may have corresponding terms of use. Each of the internet content sources 31, 32, 33 may use a standard web browser to provide the terms of use which may be the legal agreement readable by the user 40. Each of the content sources 31, 32, 33 may provide different machine-readable terms of use protocols. The machine-readable terms of use protocols may be collected and/or stored on the terms of use server 180. The terms of use server 180 may store a table which may associate the machine-readable terms of use protocols with corresponding web pages.

In an embodiment, one or more of the internet content sources 31, 32, 33 may not provide the machine-readable terms of use protocol. A third party provider may access the webpage to obtain the terms of use which may be the legal agreement readable by the user 40. The third party provider may use the terms of use which may be the legal agreement readable by the user 40 to prepare the machine-readable terms of use protocol. The third party provider may transfer the machine-readable terms of use protocol to the terms of use server 180, and/or the third party provider may store the machine-readable terms of use protocol on the terms of use server 180. Thus, the application 15 may access and/or may use the machine-readable terms of use protocols for various web pages which may correspond to the terms of use and/or the legal agreements readable by the user 40.

An embodiment of the application 15 may encounter the internet multimedia content on a webpage. The application 15 may contact the terms of use server 180 to determine if the machine-readable terms of use protocol may be available for the webpage. The application 15 may retrieve the machine-readable terms of use protocols corresponding to the webpage. The application 15 may parse and/or may examine the machine-readable terms of use protocol to ensure that the terms of use for the webpage are followed by the application 15. For example, the application 15 may conform presentation, display and/or use of the enhanced multimedia controls to the terms of use.

The application 15 may determine that the machine-readable terms of use protocol may be unavailable for the webpage. If the machine-readable terms of use protocol may be unavailable, the application 15 may display the “Terms of Use” control in the enhanced multimedia controls of the application 15. The terms of use server 180 may record failed attempts to retrieve the machine-readable terms of use protocol. An operator of the terms of use server 180 may investigate web pages corresponding to the failed attempts so that the machine-readable terms of use protocols may be obtained, created and/or stored by the terms of use server 180.

Advertising content may be associated with the internet multimedia content. The advertising content may have and/or may be image content, video content, audio content, graphics, animations, video clips, text, web formatting, links to URLs and/or the like. The advertising content may be displayed with and/or in the active video object 130 and/or the active image object 150. For example, the advertising content may be video content displayed in the active video object 130 before display of the internet multimedia content, as known to one having ordinary skill in the art as a “pre-roll” advertisement. As another example, the advertising content may be video content displayed in the active video object 130 at various times during rendering of the internet multimedia content. Thus, the advertising content may interrupt the internet multimedia content for “commercial breaks.”

Alternatively, the advertising content may be displayed in the web content 125 which may be located outside of the active video object 130 and/or the active image object 150. For example, the advertising content may be an image and/or a link to an associated URL. The image and/or the link may be displayed in the web content adjacent to the active video object 130. The advertising content and presentation of the advertising content are not limited to the examples presented herein, and the advertising content may be any advertising content known to one having ordinary skill in the art.

The application 15 may detect and/or identify the advertising content. For example, a source of the internet multimedia content, a source of the advertising content and/or a third party may provide machine-readable tags which may identify the advertising content. The machine-readable tags may be delivered as part of the advertising content and/or the internet content 125. Alternatively, the machine-readable tags may be available on a server accessible to the application 15 using the internet 25. The server may provide the machine-readable tags in response to a request from the application 15.

The machine-readable tags may enable the application 15 to distinguish the advertising content from non-advertising portions of the internet multimedia content and/or the internet content 125. Further, the machine-readable tags may indicate requirements for processing, displaying, rendering and/or controlling rendering of the advertising content when the internet multimedia content is transmitted to and/or rendered by one or more of the available rendering devices in the network 20. The machine-readable tags may indicate the requirements for processing and/or recording the advertising content when the internet multimedia content is recorded by the application 15.

The application 15 may ensure that the advertising content is displayed to the user 40 when the internet multimedia content is transmitted to and/or rendered by one or more of the available rendering devices in the network 20. Further, the application 15 may transcode, may reformat and/or may repurpose the advertising content to effectively and/or appropriately display the advertising content on one or more of the available rendering devices in the network 20.

As a first example, the application 15 may identify advertising content having an animated Graphics Interchange Format (“GIF”) image displayed in the internet content 125 adjacent to the active video object 130 in the browser user interface 50 of the application 15. If the user 40 transmits the internet multimedia content associated with the active video object 130 to a DLNA-compliant television in the network 20, the application 15 may transcode and/or may reformat the animated GIF image to generate a short video advertisement appropriate for display on the DLNA-compliant television. The application 15 may transmit the short video advertisement to the DLNA-compliant television before transmittal of the internet multimedia content to the DLNA-compliant television. The DLNA-compliant television may render the short video advertisement as a “pre-roll” advertisement before rendering the internet multimedia content. Identification of the advertising content and/or conversion of the advertising content to the short video advertisement may be based on machine-readable tags that may be associated with the advertising content.

As a second example, the application 15 may identify video advertising segments displayed in the active video object 130 in the browser user interface 50 of the application 15. For example, the application 15 may identify video advertising segments. Each of the video advertising segments may have a twelve second duration, for example. The video advertising segments may be displayed as “commercial breaks” at known times T1, T2 and T3 during display of the internet multimedia content in the active video object 130. If the internet multimedia content is transmitted to one or more of the available rendering devices in the network 20, the application 15 may ensure that the video advertising segments are transmitted to and/or rendered by the rendering device in the network 20 at the known times T1, T2 and T3. The application 15 may disable some or all of the playback controls during rendering of the video advertising segments. For example, the application 15 may not allow the user to pause, to fast forward or to seek forward during rendering of the video advertising segments. The application 15 may not allow the user to view, to access and/or to seek to a portion of the internet multimedia content before viewing and/or rendering of a preceding video advertising segment.

Identification of the advertising content and/or disabling of the playback controls may be based on machine-readable tags that may be associated with the advertising content.

As a third example, the application 15 may identify advertising content having an advertising image associated with advertising text displayed in the internet content 125 on the same webpage as the active video object 130. The user 40 may use the enhanced multimedia controls 200 to select the enhanced multimedia option “Record” for the internet multimedia content associated with the active video object 130. For example, the internet multimedia content may be recorded as a digital multimedia content file stored on the local server. In an embodiment, the application 15 may transcode, may repurpose and/or may reformat the advertising content for inclusion in the digital multimedia file stored on the local server. For example, the digital multimedia file may be a video file which displays the advertising image for the first five seconds, displays the advertising text for the next five seconds, and displays the internet multimedia content for a remainder of the digital multimedia file. Identification of the advertising content and/or inclusion of the advertising content in the digital multimedia file stored on the local server may be based on machine-readable tags associated with the advertising content.

FIG. 9 generally illustrates a flowchart of a method 300 for rendering internet multimedia content and/or locally stored multimedia content in a network in an embodiment of the present invention. As generally shown at step 301, the application 15 may determine availability and/or capabilities of the available rendering devices in the network 20 such as, for example, the rendering devices 21, 22, 23. For example, the RDC component 110 may determine the availability and/or the capabilities of the available rendering devices in the network 20. The application 15 may create, may maintain and/or may update an internal list of the available rendering devices in the network 20. The internal list may have the capabilities of the available rendering devices. For example, the RDC component 110 may create, may maintain and/or may update the internal list.

As generally shown at step 305, the application 15 may enable the user 40 to search for and/or retrieve the internet multimedia content. The application 15 may search for and/or may retrieve the internet multimedia content based on user input provided by input means associated with the device on which the application 15 resides. For example, the browser user interface 50 may accept the user input and/or may retrieve and render the internet multimedia content. The application 15 may retrieve the internet multimedia content from remote servers, such as, for example, the internet content sources 31, 32, 33. For example, the web browser application 60 may retrieve the internet multimedia content from the remote servers. The internet multimedia content may be rendered by the application 15, such as, for example, by the browser user interface 50 and/or the multimedia player 70.

As generally shown at step 310, the application 15 may determine the enhanced multimedia options appropriate for the internet multimedia content and/or the available rendering devices. Determination of the enhanced multimedia options appropriate for the internet multimedia content and/or the available rendering devices may be based on the properties and/or the restrictions of the internet multimedia content and/or the capabilities of the available rendering devices. As generally shown at step 315, the application 15 may provide and/or may display the enhanced multimedia options appropriate for the internet multimedia content and/or the available rendering devices. For example, the enhanced multimedia user interface 80 may display the enhanced multimedia options appropriate for the internet multimedia content and/or the available rendering devices.

As generally shown at step 320, the user 40 may select one of the “Redirect” options. The selected “Redirect” option may correspond to one or more of the available rendering devices, such as, for example, one or more of the rendering devices 21, 22, 23. As generally shown at step 325, the application 15 may process the internet multimedia content to prepare the internet multimedia content for delivery to the target rendering device. For example, the transcoding engine may process the internet multimedia content, The application 15 and/or the transcoding engine 90 may transcode and/or may reformat the internet multimedia content based on the capabilities of the target rendering device.

As generally shown at step 330, the application 15 may transmit the transcoded, reformatted and/or repurposed internet multimedia content to the target rendering device using the network 20. For example, the media server component 100 may receive the transcoded, reformatted and/or repurposed internet multimedia content from the transcoding engine 90. The media server component 100 may transmit the transcoded, reformatted and/or repurposed internet multimedia content to the target rendering device using the network 20. The media server component 100 may store and/or may buffer a portion and/or an entirety of the transcoded, reformatted and/or repurposed internet multimedia content received from the transcoding engine 90.

As generally shown at step 335, the target rendering device may render the internet multimedia content. For example, the target rendering device may render the transcoded, reformatted and/or repurposed internet multimedia content received from the media server component 100. The application 15 may enable the user 40 to control the rendering by the target rendering device. The application 15 may discontinue rendering of the internet multimedia content within the browser user interface 50. Alternatively, the application 15 may continue to render the internet multimedia content within the browser user interface 50 in approximate synchronization with rendering of the active content object by the target rendering device.

As generally shown at step 340, the application 15 may enable the user 40 to search for and/or retrieve different internet multimedia content. In an embodiment, the application 15 may terminate the rendering of the internet multimedia content on the target rendering device in response to navigation from the webpage having and/or providing the internet multimedia content. In another embodiment, the application 15 may continue to render the internet multimedia content on the target rendering device. The application 15 may display and/or may continue to display rendering controls so that the user 40 may continue to control the rendering of the internet multimedia content by the target rendering device.

It should be understood that various changes and modifications to the presently preferred embodiments described herein will be apparent to those skilled in the art. Such changes and modifications may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention and without diminishing its attendant advantages. It is, therefore, intended that such changes and modifications be covered by the appended claims. 

1. A computer-readable medium having program instructions which comprise a web browser application wherein a first device and a plurality of UPnP AV rendering devices are connected to a network wherein execution of the program instructions by the first device enables the first device to perform the steps of: retrieving a web page from a web server via the internet at the direction of a user of the first device; displaying the web page in a user interface of the first device; and detecting one of the plurality of UPnP AV rendering devices wherein the web browser application uses UPnP protocols to detect the UPnP AV rendering device.
 2. The computer-readable medium of claim 1 further comprising instructions for the first device to perform the step of: creating an internal list of available UPnP AV rendering devices connected to the network.
 3. The computer-readable medium of claim 1 further comprising instructions for the first device to perform the step of: communicating with the UPnP AV rendering devices connected to the network to determine capabilities of the rendering devices.
 4. The computer-readable medium of claim 1 further comprising instructions for the first device to perform the step of: displaying a list of one or more available UPnP AV rendering devices connected to the network wherein the list is displayed in the user interface of the first device.
 5. The computer-readable medium of claim 1 further comprising instructions for the first device to perform the step of: presenting a redirection option to allow the user of the first device to redirect an internet multimedia content object displayed in the web page to one of the available UPnP AV rendering devices connected to the network.
 6. The computer-readable medium of claim 1 further comprising instructions for the first device to perform the step of: presenting a bookmark option to allow the user of the first device to create a bookmark wherein the bookmark associates an internet multimedia content object displayed in the web page with one of the available UPnP AV rendering devices connected to the network.
 7. The computer-readable medium of claim 1 further comprising instructions for the first device to perform the step of: presenting a bookmark option to allow the user of the first device to create a bookmark for an internet multimedia content object displayed in the web page wherein the web browser application has a UPnP AV media server component which allows an available UPnP AV rendering device to access the bookmarked internet multimedia content object.
 8. The computer-readable medium of claim 1 further comprising instructions for the first device to perform the step of: presenting a bookmark option to allow the user of the first device to create a bookmark for an internet multimedia content object displayed in the web page wherein the web browser application has a transcoding element which transcodes the internet multimedia content object for compatibility with an available UPnP AV rendering device.
 9. A computer-readable medium having program instructions which comprise a web browser application wherein a first device and a rendering device are connected to a network wherein execution of the program instructions by the first device enables the first device to perform the steps of: retrieving a web page in response to an input from a user of the first device wherein the web page is retrieved from the internet; displaying the web page in a user interface of the first device wherein the web page displays an internet multimedia content object in a first area of the web page; and presenting a redirection option to allow the user of the first device to redirect the internet multimedia content object to the rendering device wherein the rendering device displays the internet multimedia content object in response to user input selecting the redirection option.
 10. The computer-readable medium of claim 9, wherein the web page displays advertising content in a second area of the web page wherein the first area and the second area are separate areas of the web page, further comprising instructions for the first device to perform the steps of: combining the internet multimedia content object and the advertising content; and transmitting the combination of the internet multimedia content object and the advertising content to the rendering device in response to user input selecting the redirection option.
 11. The computer-readable medium of claim 10 wherein the internet multimedia content object is a video object viewable within the web page, and the advertising content is an image object separately displayed in the web page.
 12. The computer-readable medium of claim 10 further comprising instructions for the first device to perform the step of: transcoding the advertising content to produce a video object displayable by the rendering device wherein the transcoded advertising content is displayed on the rendering device before the rendering device displays the internet multimedia content object.
 13. The computer-readable medium of claim 10 wherein the advertising content comprises text displayed in the web page separately from the internet multimedia content.
 14. The computer-readable medium of claim 10 wherein the web page comprises machine readable tags which identify the advertising content within the web page.
 15. The computer-readable medium of claim 10 further comprising instructions for the first device to perform the steps of: examining machine readable tags which specify requirements for display of the advertising content when redirecting the internet multimedia content object to a rendering device; and combining the internet multimedia content object and the advertising content in accordance with the requirements.
 16. The computer-readable medium of claim 9, wherein a plurality of rendering devices are connected to the network, further comprising instructions for the first device to perform the step of: presenting a plurality of redirection options wherein each redirection option of the plurality of redirection options corresponds to a different rendering device available in the local area network.
 17. The computer-readable medium of claim 9 wherein the redirection option allows the user to specify a UPnP AV rendering device available in the local area network wherein the internet multimedia content object is rendered by the UPnP AV rendering device specified by the user in response to user input selecting the redirection option.
 18. The computer-readable medium of claim 9 further comprising instructions for the first device to perform the steps of: examining digital rights management protection associated with the internet multimedia content object; determining that the digital rights management protection requires the internet multimedia content object to be transferred over a secure connection; and negotiating a secure connection to transfer the internet multimedia content object to the rendering device in response to the determination.
 19. A computer-readable medium having program instructions which comprise a web browser application wherein a first device and a rendering device are connected to a network wherein execution of the program instructions by the first device enables the first device to perform the steps of: retrieving web pages from web servers accessible via the internet at the direction of a user of the first device; displaying the web pages in a user interface of the first device wherein the web pages provide access to internet multimedia content objects; presenting bookmark options which correspond to the internet multimedia content objects wherein selection of a bookmark option by the user of the first device creates a bookmark for the corresponding internet multimedia content object; and providing access to the bookmarked internet multimedia content objects wherein the web browser application has a media server component which provides access to the bookmarked internet multimedia content objects wherein the rendering device accesses the bookmarked internet multimedia content objects using the media server component.
 20. The computer-readable medium of claim 19 wherein the media server component is a UPnP AV media server which makes the bookmarked internet multimedia content objects available to UPnP AV rendering devices connected to the network.
 21. The computer-readable medium of claim 19 wherein the media server component makes the bookmarked internet multimedia content objects available when the web browser application is not being actively used.
 22. The computer-readable medium of claim 19 wherein the media server component sends messages to rendering devices in the network to indicate the availability of internet multimedia content objects previously bookmarked by a user of the first device. 